I think republicans do see it, thats why they’ve been pushing for gerrymandering, voter suppression and encouraging the hacking of elections so hard. Plus as moderate leave the GOP (right now college educated whites are starting to leave the GOP and become swing voters) that means only the hardcore GOP voters who heavily subscribe to white identity politics are left. So if a GOP politician doesn’t support white identity politics they risk losing a primary.
Also the demographic wave will not be evenly distributed. For the most part it just means urban areas and blue states become even more blue. The majority of states will still be red states as far as I can tell. So I’m guessing also the GOP isn’t worried about it for that reason too.
Also I tend to think that is one reason the GOP is pushing extremely conservative judges for the appellate court, so they can overrule blue state initiatives. Maybe they’ll push for judges to rule Californias environment laws unconstitutional or Vermonts minimum wage unconstitutional.
I think the GOP sees what is coming but hopes a mixture of cheating combined with corralling all the demographic changes into blue states means it won’t effect them.
You do realize this is 2020 not 1960 anymore? women have held top positions in all areas of society for years yet people like you always throw out the victim card.
Representation at the top is still very far from fair and equal. We’ve made some progress but we have a long way to go, and the chief impediment to that progress is that so many folks think we’re all done with progress.
Hillary can bash Sanders all she wants but I know for a fact back in 2016 Sanders was holding rallies where it was standing room only to listen to him whereas for Hillary, hers didnt have near the crowds (the media was careful how they filmed them) and she needed paid celebrities like Beyonce to bring people in.
There was a real excitement about Sanders even among conservatives and people really saw the opportunity for someone who would make some changes.
Lots of democrats thought Trump getting the nomination in 2016 was a dream come true, if I recall correctly. So I’d take all this with a ton of salt - no one really knows what can and will happen.
I remember vaguely he gave the opening speech and it was too long and not well received. Funny that. But in fairness, I was still a Repub way back then.
But Clinton still won the nomination. All that proves is that the overlap between Clinton voters and Clinton supporters with the time/enthusiasm on their hands to stand around an event center is less than the overlap of Sanders voters and Sanders supporters with time/enthusiasm. But the overall group of Sanders supporters still proved to be considerably smaller than Clinton’s no matter how many event halls he filled.
Yup, in fact Clinton went on the late night talk circuit and handled the needling well. You know you have a bad and boring nomination speech for that thrilling orator Michael Dukakis!!!
Umm, no. The DNC didn’t control the number of candidates. O’Malley and Webb were around.
Also, if you read the articles, it mentioned that Bernie’s colleagues in Congress hate his guts. Superdelegates are elected officials, not some bogeymen conjured up. In fact, Sanders himself was a superdelegate.
The crowd size argument? Oh Lord, spare me from the 4,703rd repetition of this long-debunked argument.
Look, it’s really simple. You can get big, enthusiastic crowds if only 10% of the population supports you, but they support you very enthusiastically. Nobody’s ever demonstrated any correlation between getting big crowds and winning elections.
Sanders has never demonstrated the ability to make changes.
Neither the Trump people nor the Russians said anything negative about Sanders, for the simple reason they knew he’d be easy to beat in the unlikely event that he won the nomination. Beating Hillary took work on their part, and even then it wouldn’t have worked if Comey has just shut the fuck up during the last two weeks of the campaign.
Hell, I could have written an anti-Sanders ad campaign for the GOP, and that sort of thing isn’t exactly my forte.